Australia PM Albanese says election ‘imminent’ as govt rushes to pass tax cuts Bill

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Three-year term limits mean Australia needs to go to the polls at least by May 17 to elect a new parliament.

Three-year term limits mean Australia needs to go to the polls by May 17 at the latest to elect a new Parliament.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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- Australia Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said on March 27 he planned to call an election “imminently”, as his centre-left government rushed through Parliament a Bill on fresh tax cuts in a bid to lift support and win back aggrieved voters.

Three-year term limits mean Australia needs to go to the polls by May 17 at the latest to elect a new Parliament. Opinion surveys show a close-run election, with the opposition Liberal-National coalition ahead of Labor by a narrow margin.

“It will be in May, I can guarantee that. And it will be called pretty imminently,” Mr Albanese told radio station Triple M.

“I’m not calling it today but I will call it soon. I think that Australians want to get on with it.”

Mr Albanese is planning to visit Governor-General Sam Mostyn’s residence in Canberra on the morning of March 28 to call the election, The Sydney Morning Herald and The Australian newspapers said in separate reports, citing several unidentified sources.

The national vote will be held on May 3, The Australian said in its report, citing multiple sources in the Labor Party.

Mr Albanese’s office did not immediately respond to a request seeking comment.

The governor-general represents Britain’s King Charles, the head of state in Australia, and her authorisation is necessary to dissolve Parliament and order a general election.

The Albanese-led Labor government has been announcing a slew of measures aimed at pleasing families and businesses grappling with high costs, as it seeks to win a second term.

In the federal budget on March 25, the government surprisingly launched two new rounds of tax cuts, worth A$17.1 billion (S$14.4 billion).

That meant a worker on average earnings could get a new tax cut of A$268 in the fiscal year ending June 2027 and A$536 in the next year, though it is modest compared with the A$1,654 relief introduced this fiscal year.

The tax cuts Bill was introduced in the Lower House on the morning of March 26, and was cleared in a late-night sitting in the Senate – where Labor does not have a majority – with the help of the Greens party and independents.

The opposition Liberal-National Coalition said it would repeal the Bill if elected to power, replacing it with its own plan to halve the fuel excise for a year.

Opposition leader Peter Dutton called it a “real, immediate relief” saving families around A$750 a year. But Treasurer Jim Chalmers argued the opposition’s plans would provide only limited relief, and that Australians would be worse off.

“This decision will haunt them every single day of the election campaign,” Mr Chalmers told reporters. REUTERS

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